Knowledge Gaps in Quantifying the Climate Change Response of Biological Storage of Carbon in the Ocean

IF 7.3 1区 地球科学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Earths Future Pub Date : 2024-06-06 DOI:10.1029/2023EF004375
Stephanie Henson, Chelsey A. Baker, Paul Halloran, Abigail McQuatters-Gollop, Stuart Painter, Alban Planchat, Alessandro Tagliabue
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Abstract

The ocean is responsible for taking up approximately 25% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions and stores >50 times more carbon than the atmosphere. Biological processes in the ocean play a key role, maintaining atmospheric CO2 levels approximately 200 ppm lower than they would otherwise be. The ocean's ability to take up and store CO2 is sensitive to climate change, however the key biological processes that contribute to ocean carbon storage are uncertain, as are how those processes will respond to, and feedback on, climate change. As a result, biogeochemical models vary widely in their representation of relevant processes, driving large uncertainties in the projections of future ocean carbon storage. This review identifies key biological processes that affect how ocean carbon storage may change in the future in three thematic areas: biological contributions to alkalinity, net primary production, and interior respiration. We undertook a review of the existing literature to identify processes with high importance in influencing the future biologically-mediated storage of carbon in the ocean, and prioritized processes on the basis of both an expert assessment and a community survey. Highly ranked processes in both the expert assessment and survey were: for alkalinity—high level understanding of calcium carbonate production; for primary production—resource limitation of growth, zooplankton processes and phytoplankton loss processes; for respiration—microbial solubilization, particle characteristics and particle type. The analysis presented here is designed to support future field or laboratory experiments targeting new process understanding, and modeling efforts aimed at undertaking biogeochemical model development.

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量化海洋生物碳储存的气候变化响应方面的知识差距
海洋吸收了大约 25% 的人为二氧化碳排放量,其碳储存量是大气的 50 倍。海洋中的生物过程发挥着关键作用,使大气中的二氧化碳含量保持在比大气低约 200 ppm 的水平。海洋吸收和储存二氧化碳的能力对气候变化很敏感,但有助于海洋碳储存的关键生物过程,以及这些过程将如何应对气候变化并对气候变化产生反馈,都是不确定的。因此,生物地球化学模型对相关过程的表述大相径庭,导致对未来海洋碳储存的预测存在很大的不确定性。本综述从生物对碱度的贡献、净初级生产和内部呼吸三个专题领域确定了影响未来海洋碳储存变化的关键生物过程。我们对现有文献进行了综述,以确定对影响未来海洋生物介导的碳储存具有重要意义的过程,并根据专家评估和社区调查对这些过程进行了优先排序。在专家评估和调查中排名靠前的过程包括:碱度--对碳酸钙生成的高度理解;初级生产--生长的资源限制、浮游动物过程和浮游植物损失过程;呼吸--微生物溶解、颗粒特征和颗粒类型。本文所做的分析旨在支持未来以了解新过程为目标的实地或实验室实验,以及旨在开发生物地球化学模型的建模工作。
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来源期刊
Earths Future
Earths Future ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCESGEOSCIENCES, MULTIDI-GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
CiteScore
11.00
自引率
7.30%
发文量
260
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Earth’s Future: A transdisciplinary open access journal, Earth’s Future focuses on the state of the Earth and the prediction of the planet’s future. By publishing peer-reviewed articles as well as editorials, essays, reviews, and commentaries, this journal will be the preeminent scholarly resource on the Anthropocene. It will also help assess the risks and opportunities associated with environmental changes and challenges.
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